I don’t know about other parts of the country, but there are a lot more San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco Progessive/AOR airchecks than I expected.I didn't have a local AOR growing up, unless a signal from WRIF drifted in from Detroit, or later, Dayton's WVUD. When I was in Dayton for broadcasting school, I listened extensively to WVUD (owned by the University of Dayton, with jocks who were attending UD but professional sales and management). In the summer of '75, I remember such non-top 40 songs as ELO (who still were finding their place in the U.S.)'s "Boy Blue", Merry Clayton (the female voice you hear in the Rolling Stones "Gimme Shelter") with "Keep Your Eye on the Sparrow", Cat Stevens, "Two Fine People, as well as the more rockier tunes. "Let's Get it On" by Marvin Gaye was in the gold library. I could hear other AORs like WOXR, Oxford, OH, with more of a folk-AOR approach. That summer, WTUE flipped from Top 40 to AOR, which within a couple of years knocked WVUD out of the format.
Progressive/AORs never were airchecked and preserved the way top 40 was. It's a shame because we've missed a lot of history.
I think the key is that they were not traded as extensively as the Top 40 airchecks were.
